mrsrissa-allen:
Marissa knew it. She knew it. The kid was going to be as ungrateful as he had been the first time around, totally ignoring her kind gesture for his own pride and ego. Well, two could play at that game. Except she wasn’t meant to, she quietly reminded herself, she was supposed to be the mature responsible adult who understood that he was dealing with all the emotions that came with normal teenage life with the added stresses of being suspect numero uno in your girlfriend’s murder. She so desperately wanted to lash out on the hostile teen, but it hadn’t been appropriate last time and it would be worse given she should have reflected and felt remorse for her actions. Damn maturity.
“Rigatoni, huh? Good choice,” She tried to make small talk that she already knew Emmett was desperately avoiding. She didn’t mind though, making small talk was about half her job, she could talk about mundane topics for hours. Even to the unwilling. And she was mighty sure that he was unwilling.
She bit down on her lip, careful to remind herself once more that she was not to fly off the handle because of some silly little comments made by an overgrown bratty kid. She would be the bigger person even if Emmett couldn’t accept her genuine outreaches, then or now. Still, she couldn’t let him just walk all over her, she needed to say something. “Well I was just trying to be nice, you looked like you were going through a hard time,” She defended herself, “Actually I know that you were because you sitting in a car park blaring emo music through your open windows and my husband’s a police officer so I know who you are. I would like to think if another mother saw my daughter in a similar situation they would offer some kind of help. But you’re right, I didn’t handle myself or the situation that best way I could have.” Lies, the last part was total lies. She thought she’d handled herself pretty well and only responded fittingly to his lack of gratitude, but she couldn’t exactly just take back the apology she’d forced out. “I just thought that I should let you know, that I was genuinely trying to help you and I’m sorry that it was offensive to you.”
Of course, this lady liked Rigatoni. Figures. Boring people gravitated toward boring pasta shapes. Emmett wanted to tell her it wasn’t his choice and that his mom told him to get it, but he also like, didn’t want to talk to her for longer than necessary so he kept that to himself.
He fucking hated this. She was like, trying to be a good person and shit and he had to validate her or some crap like that for recognizing that she was being a crazy bitch. What happened to letting bygones be bygones? What’s with people having to verbalize and communicate shit? Go all Kumbaya? Couldn’t she just ignore him and call it a day? It’s the twenty-first century, man. We’ve evolved from talking about shit. Just drown yourself in shitty memes and good music like a normal person.
“Look, just-- we’re chill, okay?” Emmett got out, forcing himself to talk despite the heat he felt in his cheeks from having to hear the lady out. S’fucking embarrassing having to talk about shit. In the middle of a grocery store, no less. “Just... do you and I’ll do me, and we don’t have to like, talk.” Ever. “You’re forgiven, I forgive you or whatever.” Christ, this was weird. Emmett wanted to curl his hands into fists and shove them into the pouch of his hoodie to ease his nerves but he couldn’t because he was holding a box of fucking Rigatoni.
“Just... don’t call your police officer husband on me, alright?” He added in a sheepish attempt at being lighthearted for once, especially since this lady couldn’t stop namedropping the fact that she had a husband in the police force. He didn’t know if she was trying to earn cool points or be threatening but like, he didn’t actually care what the man who didn’t fuck her did so she could totally stop mentioning it if she wanted.











